Asked by TheOGBlurryface
How was the U.S. Constitution different from the Articles of Confederation?
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1 point
The U.S. Constitution set up the first form of government for the newly independent United States.
The U.S. Constitution allowed for each state to have an equal vote in Congress regardless of size or population.
The U.S. Constitution separated powers between the judicial, legislative, and executive branches.
The U.S. Constitution had only one branch, a unicameral legislature that had limited power.
*
1 point
The U.S. Constitution set up the first form of government for the newly independent United States.
The U.S. Constitution allowed for each state to have an equal vote in Congress regardless of size or population.
The U.S. Constitution separated powers between the judicial, legislative, and executive branches.
The U.S. Constitution had only one branch, a unicameral legislature that had limited power.
Answers
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
The correct option is:
**The U.S. Constitution separated powers between the judicial, legislative, and executive branches.**
This is a key difference from the Articles of Confederation, which did not have a separate executive branch and had a very weak central government. The Constitution established a stronger federal structure with distinct branches of government.
**The U.S. Constitution separated powers between the judicial, legislative, and executive branches.**
This is a key difference from the Articles of Confederation, which did not have a separate executive branch and had a very weak central government. The Constitution established a stronger federal structure with distinct branches of government.
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